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Huairasinchi III Edition: From the Quilotoa Crater to the Pacific Coast
By Giovanna Valdivieso
Photos: Huaira Sinchi & Xavier Andrango
Telling it isn't the same as living it. Be part of this experience!
Related Photo Slide


QUITO. SEPTEMBER 24-26, 2004. A brilliant morning sun presided over a bevy of activities taking place on the edge of Cotopaxi National Park at over 3000 meters altitude. Center stage were 140 hardy contestants who were lined up to initiate the 3rd edition of the Huairasinchi Adventure Race. Despite a cold Andean wind swirling around them, and the prospect of three days of grueling physical work ahead of them, the adventurers sported optimistic looks and were eager to start the race.

Huairasinchi (which means "force of the wind" in the indigenous Quechua language) began in Ecuador three years ago as a response by local aficionados to initiate a homegrown, cross-country adventure race on par with the world renowned Raid Gauloises race. Since its inception, the race has grown more popular and competitive, capturing the imagination of Ecuadorians and foreigners alike. (GoEcuador exclusive! Read interview with Ana Maria Sevilla, co-founder of Huairasinchi. Click here!)

This year's race started near Quilotoa in Ecuador's Cotopaxi province and ended after crossing the warm and sometimes torrential waters of the Quevedo River in Ecuador's Pacific Coast Rios province. There were 35 teams of four racers each (according to race rules, one team member has to be female). When completed, Ecuador's premier "extreme" race covered 240 kilometers of diverse and difficult landscapes that included paramo, cloud forest, rivers and tropical pampas.

GoEcuador.com and a group of reporters shared with the sportsmen the first and last day of this 3 day, nonstop race. Mountain biking, trekking, canoeing, roping and navigating were the different competitive modalities competitors faced along the route.

The cord crossing of the Toachi canyon


Friday, September 24

Family members, friends and reporters counted down the minutes until the starting whistle finally blew and the racers were off. After a 2 kilometer sprint, the competitors mounted their mountain bikes. Bikes would be the modality of travel for this the first leg of the competition and the subsequent two.

As the competitors receded from our view, the "press" piled into two 4x4 vehicles to get to the first control point, the town of Toacazo. The team that won the previous year's race was in the lead at this point. Participants from other cities of the country and famous celebrities of Ecuadorian sports like Pepe Jijón, Dayana Passailague and the cyclist from Imbabura, Brian Portillo, headlined this elite list.

With the same velocity that they arrived to Toacazo, we watched the racers leave. Five teams arrived in the first group. After 10 minutes another 4 teams rode into the small town followed shortly after by the rest of the teams.

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Rafting in Rio Blanco

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